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November 2, 2004 Election Information |
November 2004 | ![]() |
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Ballot measures bring the voter directly into the law-making and financing process. California law is contained in the State Constitution and various state codes. Amendments to the constitution, general obligation bond acts, and proposals made through the initiative or referendum process are always brought to the people for a vote. Proposed constitutional amendments and bond measures put on the ballot by the Legislature must receive a two-thirds vote in each house. At the polls, however, only a simple majority of votes is needed to adopt any statewide ballot measure. The state bond program is the mechanism used by the state to borrow large sums of money. There are three basic ways to finance the state's capital infrastructure needs:
You may link to any individual proposition page. You may print and circulate this copyrighted material if you use it in its entirety (the introductory page plus the 16 proposition pages) and give credit to the League of Women Voters of California Education Fund. Send comments concerning the format or usability of this page to lwvc@vcwatts.org |
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